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Chimpanzee Sanctuary Northwest

Foxie playing in the mirror

March 9, 2009 by Diana

Today I discovered a new game with Foxie. I was having difficulty throwing her troll doll back to her (some days my aim is just off), so I put it in a sock and tossed it up, my thought being that she would have more to grab on to. It worked like a charm, and Foxie actually really liked the sock! She almost immediately flung it over her neck, walked down the stairs and began playing with it in front of the mirror. I am sure other chimpanzees have done this before, but it was the first time I have personally seen a chimp play in front of a mirror. She was so enamored with her own reflection playing, that she completely ignored Missy’s attempts to get her attention. For the rest of the day, Foxie carried around the sock, sometimes in her hand, sometimes over her shoulders, and once on the top of her head. Every once in a while she would go back to the mirror and play.

Filed Under: Foxie, Missy, Play, Sanctuary Tagged With: animal play, animal protection, animal rights, chimp, chimpanzee, Chimpanzee Sanctuary Northwest, Cle Elum 7, Cle Elum Seven, csnw, Enrichment, Foxie, Missy, primate protection, Primates, rescue, Sanctuary, self recognition, troll

NY Times op-ed by Charles Siebert

March 6, 2009 by Diana

One year ago, before the Cle Elum Seven arrived at Chimpanzee Sanctuary Northwest, I posted a blog entry with a link to a radio interview with Charles Siebert on This American Life.

Today, Siebert had an op-ed printed in the New York Times entitled Something Wild. Here is an excerpt:

There is something about chimpanzees — their tantalizing closeness to us in both appearance and genetic detail — that has always driven human beings to behavioral extremes, actions that reflect a deep discomfort with our own animality, and invariably turn out bad for both us and them.

Siebert uses specific examples of chimpanzee individuals to illustrate humans’ uncomfortable relationship with our closest evolutionary relatives, and our stubborn desire to make them fit into our concepts of of who they are, which manifest not from observing and appreciating chimpanzees as a distinct species,  but from our attempts to make them our human-like playthings as “pets” and “entertainers” or human surrogates in biomedical research.

Siebert explains what I have observed of captive chimpanzees – they live in a world of lost identity. They did not have the opportunity to grow up within a chimpanzee culture, but they cannot fit into our human culture either, no matter how hard we try to force them to.

Sanctuaries like Chimpanzee Sanctuary Northwest try to make the best out of the inherently unjust situation of captivity. We allow the chimpanzees to be who they are, which is sometimes a strange mix of learned “human” behaviors and a renewed expression of their instinctual chimpanzee selves. Our deepest hope is that we can provide for those in our care while working to ensure that one day sanctuaries like ours will not be necessary because chimpanzees will no longer be used for human purposes.

Filed Under: News, Sanctuary Tagged With: animal protection, animal rescue, animal rights, Animal Welfare, charles siebert, chimp mauling, chimp rescue, chimp sanctuary, chimpanzee, chimpanzee retierement, Chimpanzee Sanctuary Northwest, chimpanzees, new york times, new york times op-ed, this american life, travis

Wine tasting success!

March 1, 2009 by Sarah

Thanks to everyone who came out last night to the wine tasting event in Roslyn. It was a great success! And it was so wonderful to see and meet so many supporters from the local (and regional) community. The chimps are lucky to have such a devoted following!

To make sure the chimps got to enjoy some of the spoils, Pam (a.k.a. CSNW’s Martha Stewart) sent the AMAZING table decorations for the chimps to enjoy. She wrapped pieces of tubing with banana leaves, veggies, and rafia.  We added some peanut butter and threw them up on the top of the outdoor area. It created a little bit of a challenge – Missy and Jamie both worked hard to squeeze the tubes through the bars of the enclosure. Annie loved the banana leaves!

Jamie (with head band around her neck!):

a-jamie-tube

Missy working to get the tube through:

a-missy-pulling-tube-thru

Annie loved the banana leaves:

annie-with-banana-leaf

Missy getting the peanut butter goodness:

missy-and-asparagus

Filed Under: Annie, Enrichment, Events, Food, Fundraising, Jamie, Missy, Sanctuary Tagged With: Annie, chimp enrichment, Chimpanzee Sanctuary Northwest, csnw, Jamie, Missy

More outside action shots

February 28, 2009 by Sarah

Today Missy had more adventures in the fresh air. Jamie, Foxie and Annie were all outside too, but no one was playing with Missy. She ran inside and came right back out with this blanket. Instantly she had a game of chase going! I love the second picture – Jamie got the blanket away from Missy, climbed up the fencing, and then leapt off from about 6 feet up! I snapped the picture as she was almost to the ground.

feb-28-1 

feb-28

Filed Under: Enrichment, Jamie, Missy, Play, Sanctuary Tagged With: chimp sanctuary, chimpanzee, Chimpanzee Sanctuary Northwest, Jamie, Missy, Play, Sanctuary

Lessons from chimpanzees

February 23, 2009 by Diana

When I am feeling down, I think about the Cle Elum Seven chimpanzees at CSNW and everything they have been through in their lives.

I am amazed and humbled that Jody, after decades of living in a small cage in a medical laboratory, after having seven babies taken from her, can still enjoy relaxing in the February sun, holding her feet:

Jody outside in the sun, holding her feet

and Foxie, who endured research protocols, five babies being taken from her, and periods of social isolation, can greet each day with the desire to play with her caregivers and her chimpanzee friends

Foxie with playface, tickling Jamie

and Missy and Annie, who spent years without each other, can decide to sleep in together, napping in the side-by-side nests they created in the playroom

Side-by-side nests made by Annie and Missy

When I think about my chimpanzee friends and their lives, I realize I have little to complain about. And, if I can remember to live for today as they do, each day should include relaxation, happiness, play and companionship.

Filed Under: Annie, Foxie, Jamie, Missy, Play, Sanctuary Tagged With: animal rights, Animal Welfare, Annie, chimpanzee, Chimpanzee Sanctuary Northwest, Cle Elum, Cle Elum 7, Cle Elum Seven, csnw, Foxie, Jamie, Jody, Missy, Primates, rescue, Sanctuary

more on Travis and pet ownership

February 21, 2009 by Diana

Although much of the coverage on the tragedy of Travis, the chimpanzee in Connecticut who mauled Charla Nash and was subsequently shot and killed, has been frustrating to say the least, there have been a couple of good interviews included in media items very recently which I wanted to share.

This video segment includes an interview from an expert at Save the Chimps Sanctuary in Florida.

This article adds more information to the bigger story. Here’s are a few excerpts from the article:

“A chimpanzee who was shot and killed earlier this week for mauling a Connecticut woman was the offspring of a chimpanzee who made headlines eight years ago when a Festus teenager shot and killed her…..

In 2001, Travis’ 28-year-old mother, Suzy, escaped from Connie Braun Casey’s farm along Highway CC near Festus…..

April Truitt, a primate expert who runs the Kentucky-based Primate Rescue Center Inc., said chimps are too wild to be privately owned. She put more blame on the Caseys for the Connecticut incident than on Herold. She said the Caseys should not have been breeding and selling chimps.”

—-

You can read my reaction to the mauling in this post from Tuesday. One aspect of this story that has not been getting enough coverage is how the demand for chimpanzee “actors” helps to fuel breeding operations like Connie Casey’s. Chimpanzees should not be pets, should not be used in entertainment, and should not be used in biomedical research. There is no legitimate reason for a chimpanzee breeding operation to exist.

Jamie and Burrito were both “raised” by humans for the first years of their lives and used as “entertainers” when they were young. When they became unmanageable like any chimpanzee would, they were put into biomedical research.

Thankfully they now live in a safe, secure, and social environment at Chimpanzee Sanctuary Northwest, but others like them are not in sanctuaries, and the tragedy of Travis will occur again if laws are not put into place to make the private ownership of chimpanzees and their use in entertainment illegal.

One immediate action that you can take is to urge your federal representatives to support the Captive Primate Safety Act which would make the interstate and foreign commerce of primates illegal. Learn more from the Humane Society of the United States.

Filed Under: Burrito, Jamie, News, Sanctuary Tagged With: Animal Welfare, april truitt, charla nash, chimp attack, chimp rescue, chimpanzee, chimpanzee rescue, chimpanzee research, chimpanzee retirement, chimpanzee sanctuary, Chimpanzee Sanctuary Northwest, chimpanzees, Cle Elum 7, Cle Elum Seven, csnw, humane society of the united states, primate captive safety act, primate rescue, primate rescue center, Primates, save the chimps, travis

I could use a sunny day…

February 18, 2009 by Sarah

For our response to the tragic situation in Connecticut, click here.

It’s sunny in Cle Elum! For me, that’s reason enough to celebrate. Enjoy these pics of Jamie (with her emery board!), Foxie, and Jody and Annie!

Jamie in the sun

Foxie in the sun

Annie and Jody in the sunshine

 

 

 

Filed Under: Annie, Enrichment, Foxie, Jamie, Jody, Sanctuary, Trolls Tagged With: Annie, Chimpanzee Sanctuary Northwest, Cle Elum Seven, Enrichment, Foxie, Jamie, Jody, Play, troll

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